Title: I. Fundamentals of Business
1- I. Fundamentals of Business
2Ownership form
- Sole proprietorship
- Partnership
- Corporation
3Sole proprietorship
- Advantages
- Ease and Cost of Formation
- Secrecy
- Distribution and use of profit
- Flexibility and control
- of the business
- Government regulation
- Taxation
- Closing the business
- Disadvantages
- Unlimited liability
- Limited source of funds
- Limited Skills
- Lack of Continuity
- Lack of qualified employees
4Partnership
- Article of partnership a legal documents that
set forth the basic agreement between the
partners - General Partnership
- Limited Partnership
- Joint Ventures
5Partnership
- Advantages
- Ease of Organization
- Availability of capital and credits
- Combined skills and knowledge
- Decision making
- Regulatory controls
- Taxation
- Disadvantages
- Unlimited liability
- Business responsibility
- Life of partnership
- Distribution of profit
- Limited source of fund
6Corporation
- Legal document to be fiiled
- Name and address
- Objective of the corporation
- Classes of stock
- Expected life of the corporation
- Financial Capital Required at the time of
incorporation - Provisions for transferring shares stock between
owners - Provisions for the regulation of internal
corporate affairs - Address of the registered business office
- Names and addresses of the initial board of
directors - Names and addresses of incorporators
- Based on this the state issues Corporate Charter
7Corporation
- Private Corporation a corporation owned by one
or few people who are closely involved in
managing the business - Public Corporation corporation whose stock
anyone can buy sell or trade - Quasi-public corporation corporations owned and
operated by federal, state, or local government - Non-profit corporation Corporations that
focused on providing a service rather than
earning the profit, but are not owned by
government entity.
8Elements of corporation
- The board of directors
- Stock ownership
- Preferred stocks owners have a claim on profit
before other stockholders, but not running the
business - Common stocks have voting rights
9Corporation
- Advantages
- Limited liability
- Ease to transfer ownership
- Perpetual life
- External source of fund
- Expansion potential
- Disadvantages
- Double taxation
- Forming a Corporation
- Disclosure of information
- Employee-Owner Separation
10Other types of ownership
- S Corporations taxed as it were a partnership
but have limitation on shareholders - LLC Form of ownership that provides limited
liabilities on taxation like a partnership but
places fewer restriction on shareholders - Cooperative an organization composed of
individuals or small businesses that have banded
together to reap the benefits of belonging to a
larger organization
11Trends in Business ownership
- Merger the combination of two companies
(usually corporations) to form a new company - Horizontal merger
- Vertical merger
- Conglomerate merger
- Acquisition the purchase of one company by
another, usually by buying the stock - Leverage buyout (LBO) a purchase in which a
group of investors borrows money from banks and
another institutions to acquire a company, using
the assets of the purchased company to guarantee
the loan
12The nature of management
- Setting the goals objectives that a business
hopes and plans to achieve. - Goal setting provides direction for managers at
all level - Helps firms allocate resources
- Helps to define corporate strategy
- Helps managers assess performance
- Long-term goals vs short-term goals
13Formulating Strategy
Analyze the organization
Match the organization and its environment
Formulate strategy
Set strategic goals
Analyze the environment
14The PESTEL FRAMEWORK
What environmental factors are affecting the
organization? Which of these are the most
important at the present time? In the next few
years
- Political
- Government Stability
- Taxation Policy
- Foreign trade regulation
- Social welfare policies
- Sociocultural factors
- Population demographics
- Income distribution
- Social mobility
- Lifestyle changes
- Attitudes to work and leisure
- Levels of education
- Environmental
- Environmental protection laws
- Waste disposal
- Energy consumption
- Economic factors
- Business cycles
- GNP trends
- Interest rates
- Money supply
- Inflation
- Unemployment
- Disposable income
- Technological
- Government spending
- New discoveries/development
- Speed of technology transfer
- Legal
- Monopolies legislation
- Employment law
- Health and product safety
15Management Process
- Management is the process of planning,
organizing, directing, and controlling an
organizations resources to achieve its goal - Planning the management process of determining
what an organization needs to do and how best to
get it done - Organizing management process of determining
how best to arrange an organizations resources
and activities into a coherent structure. - Directing - management process of guiding and
motivating employees to meet an organizations
objectives - Controlling - management process of monitoring an
organizations performance to ensure that it is
meeting its goals.
16The Control Process
Set goals
Measure Performance
Evaluate Performance
Take corrective action
17Levels of Management
- Top Managers President, vice-president, CEO,
CFO, treasurer - Middle Managers Plant managers, operations
managers, division manager - First-Line Managers Supervisor, office
managers, group leader
18Areas of management
- Human Resources
- Operations
- Marketing
- Information
- Financial
- Other (RD, Public Relation)
19Basic Management Skills
- Technical
- HR
- Conceptual
- Decision Making
- Time Management
20Determinants of Organization
- Organizational structure Specialization of the
jobs to be done within an organization and the
ways in which they relate to one another - Organizational Chart Diagram depicting a
companys structure and showing employees where
they fit into its operation - Chain of command Reporting relationship within
company
21Specialization and Departmentalization
- Job specialization the process of identifying
the specific jobs that need to be done and
designating the people who will perform them - Departmentalization process of grouping jobs
into logical units - Profit Center separate company unit responsible
for its own costs and profit - Customer Departmentalization
- Product
- Process
- Geographic
- Functional
22Multiple Forms of Departmentalization
President
Vice President Marketing
Vice president Production
Vice president Finance
Functional
Italian Plant manager
French Plant manager
German Plant manager
Geographical
Product
Consumer Products
Industrial Products
23Type of organizational structure
Authority is determined by the relationships
between group functions and activities
CEO
Marketing
Production
Finance
RD
CEO
Division A
Division B
Division C
Corporate Divisions operate as autonomous
business under the larger corporate umbrella
Marketing
Production
Finance
24Type of organizational structure
CEO
Marketing
Production
Finance
RD
Product A
Product B
Product C
Teams are formed and team members report to two
or more managers
25Managing production and Improving Quality
26Goods and Service Operations
- Service Operations Business Activities that
provide tangible and intangible services - Goods Production Business operations that
create tangible products - In the service sector the profit and loss
statement should reflect such valuable assets as
employee brainpower and sensitivity to customer
needs.
27Operations
- Products provide customers with utility the
ability of the product to satisfy a human wants - Operations Management is the systematic direction
and control of the processes that transform
resources into finished services and goods. - Operations Managers are Managers responsible for
production, inventory, and quality control
28Operations management
- Production managers
- plan
- organize
- schedule
- control
- Inputs
- plant
- capital
- human resources
- material
- customers
Outputs
Transformational activities
29Operations Process
- An operations process is a set of methods and
technologies used in the production of goods and
services - Types of good manufacturing
- Transformational technology
- Chemical process
- Fabrication process
- Assembly
- Transport process
- Clerical process
- Types of service processes
- High-contact process (bus) level of
service-customer contact in which the customer
receives the service as part of the system - Low-contact process (repair service) - level of
service-customer contact in which the customer
need to be a part of system to receive service
30Differences between Service and Manufacturing
Operations
- Focus on performance
- Focus on process and outcomes
- Focus on service characteristic
- Intangibility
- Customization
- Unstorability
- Focus on service quality considerations
31Operations Planning
Business Plan and Forecast
Long-range Operations Plan capacity, location,
quality methods
Operation Schedules master production schedule,
detailed schedule
Operations control Quality control, materials
management
Output to customers
32Operations Planning
- Capacity planning THE STAKES ARE HIGH
- Location planning to consider availability of
raw materials, labor, energy and transportation
costs, local and state regulations and taxes, and
community living conditions - Layout planning
- Productive facilities - workstations and
equipment for transforming raw materials - Process layouts
- Product layouts
- Cellular layouts
- Nonproductive facilities storage and
maintenance areas - Support facilities offices, restrooms, parking
lots, cafeterias, and so forth - Methods planning
- Process flow-chart
33Operations Control
- Scheduling
- Materials management
- Transportation
- Warehousing
- Purchasing
- Supplier selection
- Inventory control
- Tools for for operation process control
- Worker training
- Just-in-time production system
- Material requirements planning
- Quality control
34Total Quality Control
- Total quality management is the sum of all
activities in getting quality products into
market place - Quality reliability - consistency of the
products quality from unit to unit. - Quality ownership principle of total quality
management that holds that quality belongs to
each person who creates it while performing job.
35Tools of quality management
- Competitive product analysis. Process by which a
company analyzes a competitors products to
identify desirable improvements in its own - Statistical process control. Evaluation methods
that allow managers to analyze vatiation in
companys production activities - Control chart
36Value, Satisfaction, and Quality
- Customer value is a difference between the values
of the customer gains from owning and using a
product and the cost of obtaining the product. - Customer satisfaction depends on a products
perceived performance in delivering value
relative to a buyers expectations - TQM programs designed to constantly improve the
quality of a product
37Exchange, Transactions, and Relationships
- Exchange is the act of obtaining a desired object
from someone by offering something in return - A transaction consists of a trade of values
between two parties One party gives X to another
party and gets Y in return monetary
transaction v barter transaction - Relationship marketing beyond creating short
term transactions, marketers need to build long
term relationships with valued customers,
distributors, dealers , and suppliers
38Markets
- The market is a set of actual and potential
buyers of a product
Product -services
Industry (a collection of sellers)
Industry (a collection of sellers)
Money
39Product marketing
Did people buy it?
Monitor revenues
Re-package/re-brand product
40Marketing Mix
4Cs Customer solution Customer Cost Convenience Co
mmunication
4Ps Product Price Place Promotion
41The companys microenvironment
Publics Financial publics Media
publics Government publics Citizen action
public Local public General public Internal
public
Marketing Intermediaries Resellers Physical
distribution firms Marketing service
agencies Financial intermediaries
Competitors
Customers Consumer market Business
market Government market International market
Suppliers
42The companys macro environment
Economic environment Changes in income consumer
buying pattern
Natural environment Shortage of raw materials
increased pollution governmental intervention
Demographic environment
Technological environment
Cultural environment
Political environment
43Demographic forces
- Demography is the study of human populations in
terms of size, density, location, age, gender,
race, occupation, and other statistics - Generational marketing
- Changing pattern of the family
- Geographic shift in population
- Better-educated and more white-collar population
- Increasing Diversity
44Economic Environment
- The economic environment consists of factors that
affect consumer purchasing power and spending
patterns. - Changes in income
- Income distribution upper-class, middle class,
working class, underclass - Changing consumer spending pattern
45Natural Environment
- Marketers should be aware of
- Shortages of raw materials
- Increased pollution
- Increased governmental intervention
- Environmentally sustainable strategy
46Political Environment
- The political environment consist of laws,
government agencies, and pressure groups that
influence and limit various organizations and
individuals in a given society. - To protect companies from each other
- To protect the interests of society
47Cultural environment
- The cultural environment is made up of
institutions and other forces that affect a
societys basic values, perceptions, preferences
and behaviors. - Persistence of cultural values
- Shifts in secondary values
- Peoples views of themselves
- Peoples views of others
- Peoples views of organizations
- Peoples views of society
- Peoples views of nature
- Peoples views of universe
48CHAPTER 4 Marketing research and information
systems
49CHAPTER 7 Market Segmentation, Targeting, and
Positioning for Competitive Advantage
50Market Segmentation, Targeting and Positioning
- Segmentation - Dividing the market into distinct
groups of buyers on the basis of needs,
characteristics, or behavior who might require
separate products or marketing mixes - Targeting The process of evaluating each market
segments attractiveness and selecting one or
more segments to enter - Positioning Arranging for a product to occupy a
clear, distinctive, and desirable place relative
to competing products in the mind of target
consumers.
51Steps in market S,P,T.
- Market Segmentation
- Identify bases for segmenting the market
- Develop segment profiles
- Market Segmentation
- Identify bases for segmenting the market
- Develop segment profiles
- Market Segmentation
- Identify bases for segmenting the market
- Develop segment profiles
52Levels of marketing segmentation
Mass marketing
Segment marketing
Niche marketing
Micromarketing
Complete segmentation
No segmentation
Focusing on subsegments or niches wit h
distinctive traits that may seek a special
combination of benefits
Local marketing
Isolating broad segments that make up a market
and adapting the marketing to match needs of one
ore more segments
Individual marketing
53Strategic Segmentation
- Purpose of segmentation is to identify groups of
customers with similar needs and behavior
patterns, so that they can offered more tightly
focused - products
- services
- communications
- Segments should be
- identifiable
- quantifiable
- addressable
- of sufficient size to be worth addressing
54Segmentation
- Geography and regionality
- Psychographics
- Preferred sales channels
- Number of products
- Sales territory
- Lifetime value
- Life stage
- Privacy Preferences
55Market Targeting
- Market targeting involves evaluating each market
segments attractiveness and selecting one or
more segment to enter - Target Market a set of buyers sharing common
needs or characteristics that the company decide
to serve
56Selecting market segments
Company marketing mix
Market
Undifferentiated marketing
Marketing mix 1
Segment 1
Marketing mix 2
Segment 2
Marketing mix 3
Segment 3
Differentiated marketing
Company marketing mix
Segment 1
Segment 2
Segment 3
Concentrated marketing
57Choosing a positioning strategy
- Competitive advantage an advantage over
competitors gained by offering consumers greater
value, either through lower prices or by
providing more benefits that justify higher
prices - Which differences to promote?
- Important
- Distinctive
- Superior
- Communicable
- Preemptive
- Affordable
- Profitable
58Developing marketing opportunities and strategies
more
The same
less
more
More for less
More for he same
More for more
The same for less
The same
Benefits
Less for much less
less
Winning value proposition
Price
Best marginal proposition
Losing value proposition
59Elements of value proposition
cost
performance
60What is a product
- Product anything that can be offered to a
market for attention, acquisition, use, or
consumption that might satisfy a want or need - Service any activity or benefit that one party
can offer to another that is essentially
intangible and does not result in the ownership
of anything - Experience whereas products are tangible and
services are intangible, experiences are
memorable.
61Three levels of product
Augmented product
Installation
Packaging
Features
After sale service
Core benefit or service
Delivery and credit
Brand name
Core product
Quality level
Design
Actual product
Warranty
62Marketing considerations for consumer products
63Individual product decisions
64Branding
- Brand is a name, term sign, symbol, or design, or
a combination of these, that identifies the maker
or seller of a product or service. - Brand equity
- Brand name selection
- Brand sponsor the product may be launched as a
manufacturers brand or manufacturer may sell to
reseller who give it a private brand. - Brand strategy
65Brand equity
- The value of the brand, based on the extent to
which it has high brand loyalty, name awareness,
perceived quality, strong brand associations, and
other assets such as patents, trademarks and
channel relationships.
66Brand name selection
- It should suggest something about the products
benefits and qualities. - It should be easy to pronounce, recognize, and
remember. - The brand name should be distinctive.
- The name should translate easily into foreign
languages. - It should be capable of registration and legal
protection.
67Brand sponsor
- Manufacturers vs private brand
- Licensing
- Co-branding the practice of using the
established brand names of two different
companies on the same product - Brand staretegy
68Brand strategy
- The company has 4 choices when it comes to brand
strategy line extension, brand extension,
multibrands, new brands. - Line extensions occur when a company introduces
additional items in a given product category
under the same brand name such as new flavors,
forms, color, added ingredients, or package size - Brand extension involves the use of a successful
brand name to launch new or modified products in
an new category
69Four brand strategies
Product category
Existing
New
Existing
Brand name
New
70Packaging and Labeling
- The activities of designing and producing the
container or wrapper for a product. - Labeling perform several functions identifies,
describes and promote. - Unit pricing
- Open dating
- Nutritional labeling
71Product Line Decision
- A product line is a group of products that are
closely related because they function ia a
similar manner. - Product line length the number of items in the
product line - Stretching - occurs when the company lengthens
its product line beyond its current range.
downward, upwards or both sides. - Filling adding more items within the present
range of the line.
72Product mix decisions
- An organization with several product lines has a
product mix. A product mix consists of all the
product lines and items that a particular seller
offer for sale.
Product mix
Product line 2
Product line 3
Product line n
Product line 1
Subline 1
Subline 2
73Chapter 9
- New Product Development and Product Life-Cycle
74Major stages in new-product development
Idea generation
75New-product development
- The development of original products, product
improvements, product modifications and new
brands through the firms own RD efforts. - Idea generation the systematic search for
new-product ideas - Internal sources, 3M approach,customers,
competitors distributors and suppliers - Idea management system appoint manager,
committee, toll numbers, incentives - Idea screening screening new product ideas in
order to spot good ideas and drop poor ones as
soon as possible - Product concept A detailed version of the
new-product idea stated in meaningful consumer
terms - Concept testing Testing new product concepts
with a group of target consumers to find out if
the concepts have strong consumer appeal - Marketing strategy development designing an
initial marketing strategy for a new product
based on the product concept
76Idea screening
- Is the product truly useful to consumers and
society? - Is it good for our particular company?
- Does it mesh well with the companys objectives
and strategies? - Do we have the people and resources to make it
succeed? - Does it delivers more value to customer than do
the competitors? - Is it easy to advertise and distribute?
77Marketing strategy development
- Describes the target market planned product
positioning and the sales and the profit goals
for the first few years - Outlines the products planned price,
distribution, and marketing budget for the first
year - Describes the the planned long-run sales, profit
goals, and marketing mix strategies
78Business Analysis
- Business Analysis a review of the sales, costs,
and profit projections for a new product to find
out whether these factors satisfy the companys
objectives. -
79Product development
- Product development a strategy for company
growth by offering modified or new products to
current market segments. Developing the product
concept into physical product in order to ensure
that the product idea can be turned into a
workable product
80Test marketing and Commercialization
- The stage of new product development in which the
product and marketing program are tested in more
realistic market settings - Standard test marketing
- Controlled test marketing
- Simulated test markets
- Introducing a new product into the market
81Speeding up New-Product Development
- Sequential product development a new product
development approach in which hone company
department works to complete its stage of the
process before passing the new product along the
next department stage - Simultaneous (or team-based) product development
an approach to developing new products in which
various company departments work closely
together, overlapping the steps in the
product-development process to save time and
increase effectivenes
82Product Life-Cycle Strategies
- PLC the course of a products sales and profits
over its lifetime. It involves five distinct
stages - Product development begins when the company
finds and develops new-product idea. During
product development, sales are zero and the
companys investment costs mount - Introduction is a period of slow sales growth as
the product is introduced in the market. Profit
are nonexistent in this in this stage because of
the heavy expenses of product introduction - Growth is a period of rapid market acceptance
and increasing profit. - Maturity is a period of slowdown in sales growth
because the product has achieved acceptance by
most potential buyers. Profit level off or
decline because of increasing marketing outlays
to defend the product against competition. - Decline is the period when sales fall off and
profits drop
83Product life cycle - PLC
Sales and profits
Sales
Profit
Time
Product Development
Introduction
Growth
Maturity
Decline
84Summary of product life-cycle characteristics,
objectives, strategies
85Chapter 10
- Pricing products pricing considerations and
approaches
86Pricing
- Price the amount of money charged for a product
or service, or the sum of the values that
consumers exchange for the benefits of having or
using the product service.
Internal factors
Pricing decisions
Marketing objectives Marketing Mix
strategy Costs Organizational considerations
87Internal factors affecting pricing decision
- Marketing objectives
- Marketing mix strategy
- Costs
- Types of costs
- Costs at different level of production
- Costs as a function of production experience
- Organizational considerations
88External factors affecting pricing decisions
- The market and demand
- Pricing in different types of market
- Consumer perceptions of price and value
- Analyzing price-demand relationships
- Price elasticity of demand
- Competitors costs, prices and offers
- Other external factors
- Economic conditions
- Reaction of resellers
- Government
- Social concerns
89General Pricing Approaches
- Cost-based pricing
- Cost-plus pricing adding a standard markup to
the cost of product - Break-even pricing setting price to break even
on costs of making and marketing a product or
setting price to make a target profit. - Value-based pricing offering just the right
combination of quality and good service at a fair
price - Competition based pricing setting prices based
on the prices that competitors charge for similar
products
90Chapter 11
- Pricing Products Pricing strategies
91New-product pricing strategy
- Market-Skimming Pricing
- Market-Penetration Pricing
92Product mix pricing strategies
- Product line pricing
- Optional-product pricing
- Captive-product pricing
- By-Product Pricing
- Product Bundle Pricing
93Price-adjustment strategies
- Discount and allowance pricing
- Segmented pricing
- Psychological pricing
- Promotional pricing
- Geographical pricing
- International pricing
94Assessing and responding to competitors price
change
Has competitor cut prices?
95Chapter 12
- Distribution Channels and Logistics Management
96The nature of the distribution channel
- Distribution channel is a set of interdependent
organizations involved in the process of making a
product or services available for use or
consumption by the consumer or business user
Store
97Distribution Channel Functions
- Information gathering and distribution
marketing research and intelligence information
about actors and forces in the marketing
environment needed for planning and aiding
exchange - Promotion developing and spreading persuasive
communications about an offer - Contact finding and communicating with
prospective buyers - Matching shaping and fitting the offer to the
buyers needs, including activities such as
manufacturing, grading, assembling, and
packaging. - Negotiation reaching an agreement on price and
other terms of the offer so that ownership or
possession can be transferred. - Physical distribution transporting and storing
goods - Financing acquiring and using funds to cover
the costs of the channel work. - Risk taking assuming the risks of carrying out
channel work
98Consumer marketing channels
- Direct marketing channel is a channel that has no
intermediary levels - Indirect marketing channel contains one or more
intermediary level
99Channel behavior
- Channel conflict disagreement among marketing
channel members on goals and roles who should
do what and for what rewards - Horizontal conflict
- Vertical conflict
100Business marketing channels
101A conventional marketing channel vs vertical
marketing system
Conventional marketing channel
Vertical marketing system
Conventional distribution channel a channel
consisting of one ore ore independent
producers, wholesalers, and detailers, each
a separate business seeking to maximize its own
profits even at the expense of profits for the
system as a whole.
Manufacturer
Manufacturer
Wholesaler
Wholesaler
Retailer
Vertical Marketing System a channel structure
in which producers, wholesalers, and detailers
act as a unified system. One channel member owns
the others, or has so much power that they all
cooperate
Retailer
Consumer
Consumer
102Vertical marketing system - VMS
- Corporate VMS combines successive stages of
production and distribution under single
ownership - channel leadership is established
through common ownership - Contractual VMS - in which independent firms at
different levels of production and distribution
join together through contacts to obtain more
economies or sales impact that they could achieve
alone - Wholesaler-sponsored voluntary chain
- Retailer cooperatives
- Franchise organizations in which a channel
member, called a franchiser, links several stages
in the production-distribution process. - Administered VMS coordinates successive stages
of production and distribution, not through
common ownership or contractual ties but through
the size and power of one of the parties
103Horizontal marketing systems
- A channel arrangement in which two or more
companies at one level join together to follow a
new marketing opportunity
104Hybrid marketing channel
- Multichannel distribution system in which a
single firm sets up two ore more marketing
channels to reach one ore more customer segments
Customer segment 1
Customer segment 2
Dealers
Producer
Customer segment 1
Dealers
Distributor
Customer segment 2
105Analyzing consumer service needs
- Designing the distribution channel starts with
finding out what targeted consumers want from the
channel - Do consumers want to buy from nearby locations or
are they willing to travel to more distant
centralized locations? - Would they rather buy in person, over the phone,
through the mail, or via the Internet? - Do they value breadth of assortment or do they
prefer specialization? - Do consumers want many add-on services (delivery,
credit, repairs, installation) or will they
obtain these elsewhere?
106Types of intermediaries
- Company sales force expand the companys direct
sales force. Assign outside salespeople to
territories and have them contact all prospects
in the area or develop separate company sales
forces for different industries. - Manufacturers activities - Hire manufacturers
agents independent firms whose sales forces
handle related products from many companies in
different regions or industries to sell the new
test equipment. - Industrial distributors Find distributors in
th4e different regions or industries who will buy
and carry the new line. Give them exclusive
distribution, good margins, product training, and
promotional support
107Number of marketing intermediaries
- Intensive distribution stocking the product in
as many outlets as possible - Exclusive distribution giving a limited number
of dealers the exclusive right to distribute the
companys products in their territories - Selective the use of more that one, but fewer
than all, of the intermediaries who are willing
to carry the companys products
108Responsibilities of channel members
- The producers and intermediaries need to agree on
the terms and responsibilities of each member - Price policy
- Conditions of sales
- Territorial rights
- Specific services to be performed by each parties
109Evaluating the alternatives
- Economic criteria a company compares the likely
probability of different channel alternatives. - Control issues other things equal the company
prefers to keep as much control as possible - Adaptive issue the companies want to keep the
channel as flexible as possible
110Physical distribution
- Physical distribution - the tasks involved in
planning, implementing, and controlling the
physical flow of materials, final goods, and
related information from points of origin to
points of consumption to meet customer
requirements at a profit
111Major logistics function
112Logistics management
- Integrated logistics management the concept
that emphasizes teamwork, both inside the company
and among all the marketing channel
organizations, to maximize the performance of the
entire distribution system - Cross functional team inside the company
- Building channel partnerships
- Cross-company teams
- Information sharing
- Anticipatory vs response-based distribution
systems - Third-party logistics